Combined impact of pesticides and other environmental stressors on animal diversity in irrigation ponds

PLoS One. 2020 Jul 2;15(7):e0229052. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229052. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Rice paddy irrigation ponds can sustain surprisingly high taxonomic richness and make significant contributions to regional biodiversity. We evaluated the impacts of pesticides and other environmental stressors (including eutrophication, decreased macrophyte coverage, physical habitat destruction, and invasive alien species) on the taxonomic richness of freshwater animals in 21 irrigation ponds in Japan. We sampled a wide range of freshwater animals (reptiles, amphibians, fishes, mollusks, crustaceans, insects, annelids, bryozoans, and sponges) and surveyed environmental variables related to pesticide contamination and other stressors listed above. Statistical analyses comprised contraction of highly correlated environmental variables, best-subset model selection, stepwise model selection, and permutation tests. Results showed that: (i) probenazole (fungicide) was a significant stressor on fish (i.e., contamination with this compound had a significantly negative correlation with fish taxonomic richness), (ii) the interaction of BPMC (insecticide; also known as fenobucarb) and bluegill (invasive alien fish) was a significant stressor on a "large insect" category (Coleoptera, Ephemeroptera, Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Odonata, and Trichoptera), (iii) the interaction of BPMC and concrete bank protection was a significant stressor on an "invertebrate" category, (iv) the combined impacts of BPMC and the other stressors on the invertebrate and large insect categories resulted in an estimated mean loss of taxonomic richness by 15% and 77%, respectively, in comparison with a hypothetical pond with preferable conditions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biodiversity
  • Carbamates / toxicity
  • Ecosystem
  • Environmental Monitoring
  • Introduced Species
  • Invertebrates / drug effects*
  • Invertebrates / physiology
  • Pesticides / toxicity*
  • Ponds
  • Thiazoles / toxicity
  • Vertebrates / physiology

Substances

  • Carbamates
  • Pesticides
  • Thiazoles
  • oryzemate
  • BPMC

Grants and funding

N.T. acknowledges the support of the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (S9) of the Ministry of the Environment, Japan. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.